The 44th World Cup season began on 24 October 2009, in Sölden, Austria, and concluded on 14 March 2010, at the World Cup finals in Garmisch, Germany.[1]
FIS Alpine Ski World Cup 2009/10 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Discipline | Men | Women | |
Overall | Carlo Janka | Lindsey Vonn | |
Downhill | Didier Cuche | Lindsey Vonn | |
Super-G | Erik Guay | Lindsey Vonn | |
Giant slalom | Ted Ligety | Kathrin Hölzl | |
Slalom | Reinfried Herbst | Maria Riesch | |
Super combined | Benjamin Raich | Lindsey Vonn | |
Nations Cup | Austria | Austria | |
Nations Cup Overall | Austria | ||
Competition | |||
Locations | 16 | 15 | |
Individual | 34 | 32 | |
Mixed | 1 | 1 | |
Cancelled | — | 1 | |
Rescheduled | 1 | 1 | |
No World Cup events were scheduled in February because of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada; the Olympic alpine events were scheduled for 13–27 February at Whistler Mountain.
The overall titles were won by Carlo Janka of Switzerland and Lindsey Vonn of the U.S., her third consecutive.
The 2010 season also marked the end to a long and successful career for Liechtenstein skier Marco Büchel.
FIS standards require that three events be completed in a discipline for a discipline trophy to be awarded. During this season, there were only three combined races (all super-combined) scheduled for the women. Because the third race was cancelled on 5 March, FIS had to make a decision about whether an official trophy would be awarded for the discipline.[2] Ultimately, FIS decided to award the discipline trophy to the leader after two events, Lindsey Vonn, giving her four crystal globes for the year (overall, downhill, Super G and combined).[3]
Calendar
editMen
editLadies
editNation team event
editRace | Season | Date | Place | Type | Winner | Second | Third | Details |
4 | 1 | 14 March 2010 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen | PG 001 | Czech Republic | Switzerland | Austria |
Men's standings
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Overalledit
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Downhilledit
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Super Gedit
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Giant slalomedit
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Slalomedit
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Super combinededit
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Ladies' standings
edit
Overalledit
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Downhilledit
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Super Gedit
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Giant slalomedit
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Slalomedit
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Super combinededit
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Nations Cup
edit
Overalledit
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Menedit
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Ladiesedit
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Footnotes
edit- ^ Giant slalom from Adelboden was rescheduled to Kranjska Gora on 26 January 2010
- ^ Downhill from Val d'Isère was rescheduled to Haus im Ennstal on 8 January 2010
References
edit- ^ "FIS-Ski - FIS World Cup". Archived from the original on 8 December 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2009.
- ^ "US Ski Team: Vonn 'unofficially' clinches super-combined World Cup title when race canceled". Associated Press. 5 March 2010. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
- ^ UPI (11 March 2010). "UPI NewsTrack Sports: Vonn declared super-combined champ". Archived from the original on 17 March 2010. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
- ^ "FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's schedule". International Ski Federation. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
- ^ "FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' schedule". International Ski Federation. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's overall standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's downhill standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's super giant slalom standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's giant slalom standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's slalom standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's combined standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' overall standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' downhill standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' super giant slalom standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' giant slalom standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' slalom standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies' combined standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 overall nations' cup standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 men's nations cup standings
- ^ FIS: Alpine World Cup 2010 ladies nations' cup standings
External links
edit- FIS-ski.com – World Cup standings
- Ski Racing.com - U.S.-based magazine - alpine racing news
- U.S. Ski Team.com - alpine news